Publications des scientifiques de l'IRD

Le Roux E., Wendling V., Panthou G., Dubas O., Vandervaere J. P., Hector Basile, Favreau Guillaume, Cohard J. M., Pierre C., Descroix Luc, Mougin E., Grippa M., Kergoat L., Demarty Jérome, Rouché Nathalie, Etchanchu Jordi, Peugeot Christophe. (2026). Hydrological regime shifts in Sahelian watersheds : an investigation with a simple dynamical model driven by annual precipitation. Hydrology and Earth System Sciences, 30 (4), 929-944. ISSN 1027-5606.

Titre du document
Hydrological regime shifts in Sahelian watersheds : an investigation with a simple dynamical model driven by annual precipitation
Année de publication
2026
Type de document
Article référencé dans le Web of Science WOS:001691299400001
Auteurs
Le Roux E., Wendling V., Panthou G., Dubas O., Vandervaere J. P., Hector Basile, Favreau Guillaume, Cohard J. M., Pierre C., Descroix Luc, Mougin E., Grippa M., Kergoat L., Demarty Jérome, Rouché Nathalie, Etchanchu Jordi, Peugeot Christophe
Source
Hydrology and Earth System Sciences, 2026, 30 (4), 929-944 ISSN 1027-5606
The Sahel, the semi-arid fringe south of the Sahara, experienced severe meteorological droughts in the 1970s-1980s. During and after these droughts, watersheds in the Central Sahel have experienced an increase in the annual runoff coefficient (annual runoff normalized by annual precipitation). We hypothesize that these increases correspond to regime shifts. To investigate the timing of these regime shifts, we introduce a lumped model that represents feedbacks between soil, water and vegetation at the watershed scale and the annual time step. This model relies on runoff coefficient as a constraint for the state variable and precipitation as unique external forcing. Four watersheds (Gorouol, Dargol, Nakanbé; and Sirba), with pluri-decennial observations (1950s-2010s), are modeled. For each watershed, one million parameterizations of this model are sampled and run, and an ensemble of one thousand best parameterizations is selected based on observed runoff coefficients. Our results show that this model can reproduce the trend of runoff coefficients. For all watersheds, almost all selected parameterizations from the ensemble are bistable. We define two alternative runoff coefficient regimes (a low and a high regime) by splitting with a threshold the bifurcation diagram of bistable parameterizations. Most selected parameterizations undergo regime shifts: simulated runoff coefficients belong to the low regime in 1965 and to the high regime in 2014. Finally, we find that the year of the regime shift, defined as the year when the number of regime shifts is maximized, was 1971, 1972, 1973, 1983 for the Gorouol, Nakanbé, Dargol and Sirba watershed, respectively. These results were obtained with a parsimonious model which deliberately neglects fine-scale processes of Sahelian hydrology. It would therefore be wise to supplement this analysis with other models - with varying levels of complexity - that also allow regime shifting. Overall, this article proposes simple ideas toward improving the modelling and characterization of hydrological regime shifts.
Plan de classement
Sciences fondamentales / Techniques d'analyse et de recherche [020] ; Sciences du milieu [021] ; Hydrologie [062]
Description Géographique
MALI ; BURKINA FASO ; NIGER ; ZONE SAHELIENNE ; ZONE SEMIARIDE
Localisation
Fonds IRD [F B010096405]
Identifiant IRD
fdi:010096405
Contact
  • Coordonnées :
    Mission Science Ouverte (MSO)
    IRD - Délégation régionale Île-de-France & Ouest
    Campus Condorcet - Hôtel à projets
    8 cours des Humanités - 93322 Aubervilliers Cedex
    Horizon Pleins textes
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